Dredd Times said:
I think that way to many of you are reading far to much into one simple sentence in this thread. The thread isnt about which was the most crucial or famous battle of WWII at all just simply a battle report nothing more or less.
Marc
Marc, although it might sound as though you are being picked upon, well you are :wink: . Nah, not
really. But as with any topic that people are interested in and have some knowledge (and/or curiosity) regarding it, what appears to be a casual statement can justly open the way for further discussion. Matthew Sprange had the best answer to what you stated, but by then the thread had "moved on" to a deepening discussion of what
indeed might be the single most important naval battle of World War Two. It's not even off topic, as many of these forum discussions end up becoming. You just happened to hit upon a great subject, even if it was not intended. :wink: If someone
were to make a list of the greatest naval battles in the war over all of the waters on the globe, the Battle of the River Plate would earn a place on the list, but it would not be at the top. Now that at least 500 hobbyists realise you aren't going to defend it with your life's blood (heh), we can say "good battle report" and move on. If on the other hand you are claiming more wet surface than the South Atlantic occupies, you need to bring some good evidence for that contention. Here is how I might rephrase that "simple sentence": "The Battle of the River Plate was the
first major naval battle of World War Two and the scuttling of the Panzerschiff Admiral Graf Spee was a great boost of morale for the British." It was one of the first battles that was covered worldwide by the press to a great degree, as the scuttling was viewed by thousands of onlookers. So yes, it was
a key battle in the war, just not
the key battle. Thus, the discussion. Cheers, and keep up the great work. BTW, for those like johng859 who wish to learn more, here is a link to a story regarding the salvage of the complete sunken ship and it being made into a museum-
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/americas/4702832.stm#map